Skip to main content
Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 2021 Nov 26:ciab978. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciab978

Phenotyping of acute and persistent COVID-19 features in the outpatient setting: exploratory analysis of an international cross-sectional online survey

Sabina Sahanic 1,#, Piotr Tymoszuk 1,12,#, Dietmar Ausserhofer 2,#, Verena Rass 3, Alex Pizzini 1, Goetz Nordmeyer 4, Katharina Hüfner 5, Katharina Kurz 1, Paulina Maria Weber 1, Thomas Sonnweber 1, Anna Boehm 1, Magdalena Aichner 6, Katharina Cima 1, Barbara Boeckle 6, Bernhard Holzner 5,7, Gerhard Rumpold 7,8, Christoph Puelacher 9, Stefan Kiechl 3, Andreas Huber 10, Christian J Wiedermann 2, Barbara Sperner-Unterweger 5, Ivan Tancevski 1, Rosa Bellmann-Weiler 1, Herbert Bachler 11, Giuliano Piccoliori 2, Raimund Helbok 3,, Guenter Weiss 1,, Judith Loeffler-Ragg 1,
PMCID: PMC8767855  PMID: 34849652

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Long COVID, defined as presence of COVID-19 symptoms 28 days or more after clinical onset, is an emerging challenge to healthcare systems. The objective of this study was to explore recovery phenotypes in non-hospitalized COVID-19 individuals.

METHODS

A dual cohort, online survey study was conducted between September 2020 and July 2021 in the neighboring European regions Tyrol (TY, Austria, n = 1157) and South Tyrol (STY, Italy, n = 893). Data on demographics, comorbidities, COVID-19 symptoms and recovery adult outpatients were collected. Phenotypes of acute COVID-19, post-acute sequelae and risk of protracted recovery were explored by semi-supervised clustering and multi-parameter LASSO modeling.

RESULTS

Working age subjects (TY: 43 yrs (IQR: 31 – 53), STY: 45 yrs (IQR: 35 – 55)) and females (TY: 65.1%, STY: 68.3%) predominated the study cohorts. Nearly half of the participants (TY: 47.6%, STY: 49.3%) reported symptom persistence beyond 28 days. Two acute COVID-19 phenotypes were discerned: the non-specific infection phenotype and the multi-organ phenotype (MOP). Acute MOP symptoms encompassing multiple neurological, cardiopulmonary, gastrointestinal and dermatological complaints were linked to elevated risk of protracted recovery. The major subset of long COVID individuals (TY: 49.3%, STY: 55.6%) displayed no persistent hyposmia or hypogeusia but high counts of post-acute MOP symptoms and poor self-reported physical recovery.

CONCLUSION

The results of our two-cohort analysis delineated phenotypic diversity of acute and post-acute COVID-19 manifestations in home-isolated patients which needs to be considered for predicting protracted convalescence and allocation of medical resources.

Keywords: COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, long-term sequelae, long-COVID, phenotyping

Supplementary Material

ciab978_suppl_Supplementary_Material
ciab978_suppl_Supplementary_Tables

Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

ciab978_suppl_Supplementary_Material
ciab978_suppl_Supplementary_Tables

Articles from Clinical Infectious Diseases: An Official Publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

RESOURCES